The Joint Admission and Matriculation Board (JAMB has announced that
it would soon commence the sale of the application form for the 2017
Unified Tertiary Matriculation Examination (UTME).
The Registrar, Prof. Ishaq Oloyede, who made this announcement on
Tuesday said an estimated 1.7 million candidates are expected to
register and sit for the Computer Based Test (CBT) across the country.
He added that they were also increasing the capacity of the CBT
centres to maximise their effectiveness to examine more candidates
within a given date.
Oloyede made this known at the Green Legacy, Olusegun Obasanjo
Presidential Library (OOPL), Abeokuta, the Ogun State capital, while
fielding questions from newsmen shortly after a meeting of the JAMB
officials and other stakeholders regarding the new Information
Technology being introduced into the system to make it less stressful to
candidates.
According to him, the body was working with the possibility of
conducting a “mock examination” not only to test its preparedness with
the new technology, but also to examine some people that are desirous of
knowing their competence with the JAMB examination.
“What we are doing appears to be suitable to majority of our
stakeholders. It is a surprise to us that we are apprehensive of what we
wanted to do that maybe we are going to create problem. We are more
confident to go along with the sale of the form for 2017 UTME
examination.
“I believed that Nigeria is ripe for this. Nigeria is more advanced
than some of these countries. At least, we have three or four countries
that are observing our examination and they want to go the way of the
conduct of the examination.
“We are expecting 1.7 million candidates and we want to make sure we
satisfy these candidates within a week or there about. That is why we
are increasing the capacity of the Computer Based Test centres to be
able to examine more candidates within a given date.
“If we are talking about 1.5 million candidates, it means that in a
given day about 60,000 or 70,000 candidates will take the examination.
“We have invited stakeholders to critique the process because we
don’t want to go in the wrong direction. We are creating some ICT
facilities and we want our stakeholders, prospective candidates,
respected scholars, institutions, civil societies to come together and
critique what we are doing, so that we can be sure, before we go too far
in a wrong direction.
“This is with a view of harvesting good ideas that could improve what
we are doing. We thought we are coming here to get dismantled, all we
have put together, but what we are having are cheers that we can do it
this way, or amend it that way.
“I must be frank with you, I cannot promise hitch free examination
because we are testing certain things. We are changing certain things.
We want to question the status quo and of course, we expect a fight back
by interest that will be trampled upon.
“We are going to be as sincere as possible in the direction we are
going. We are going to be as flexible as humanly possible. We are not
promising hitch free examination.
“We envisaged that there will be hitches here and there, but they
will not be insurmountable. Rather than promising the nation hitch free
examination, we will be promising a direction we will all be pleased
with.
“Initially there might be hiccups and of course one would not have
been appointed if it is routine. I believe that I have been given a very
difficult job and that is why I’m promising that it will be all
smooth,” Oloyede said.
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